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A n n order laid before Parliament by Mr David Blunkett,
The Spectatorthe Home Secretary, will enable juries to be told of defendants' previous convictions if they touch on 'an important matter in issue', such as 'a propensity to commit offences...
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SPECIATOR
The SpectatorHalf a cheer for Bush N ext Tuesday an unhappy choice confronts the American people. To suffer a gloating Mark Steyn. Or to endure the sight of a jubilant Michael Moore...
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I am currently sporting a plaster cast
The Spectatoron my left arm which is further encased in a sling. People wonder solicitously whether I have been attacked by enraged human-rights lawyers or serial adulterers. Alas, the truth...
Page 10
Blair's duplicity may be deliberate, or he may just change his mind a lot
The SpectatorV cry few political decisions achieve nothing but good: one of them was the abolition of exchange controls exactly 25 years ago. This week the Adam Smith Institute rightly...
Page 11
T here isn't enough dialogue between Islam and other faiths, so
The Spectatorwhen invited to address the admirable Three Faiths Forum, chaired by Sir Sigmund Sternberg, I happily agreed, and went to the mosque in the Whitechapel Road last week. I had...
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What can you say?
The SpectatorSimon Heifer on the insidious new taboos that govern society — and how those who break them risk their careers and credibility I t is hard to imagine that at the time when...
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True to herself
The SpectatorDeborah Ross talks to Joan Collins about lipstick and Ukip and finds she is as glamorous and game as ever ii . meet Joan Collins at Waterstone's in Harrods. where she is signing...
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A just wall
The SpectatorAnton La Guardia says that the Palestinians are co-authors of their own tragedy T he road from the Jordan river to Jerusalem is one of the loveliest in the Holy Land, a...
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If Bush goes, I go
The SpectatorMark Steyn predicts a victory for the President — and says he will resign if his man is not re-elected New Hampshire -vv . hat's up with Hawaii? Two polls in two Honolulu...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorI don't think Veronica will ever grow up. Now that Mick Jagger and Peter Townshend can travel on buses with 'freedom' passes (nice of Ken to hand out freedom) — not that I often...
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Why I turned against the war
The SpectatorAdrian Blomfield went to Baghdad as a strong believer in regime change. Now he thinks that Bush has messed up in Iraq — and should be booted out of the White House Nairobi . he...
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THEODORE DALRYMPLE
The SpectatorFrom time to time, our ward looks more like a police lock-up than a haven of healing. By every bed there are two policemen preventing the escape of the patient, and usually...
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When did you last see your fatherland?
The SpectatorRoger Koppel, editor-in-chief of Die Welt, on why Germany cannot go on using an undemocratic Europe to escape from its history A s everyone now knows, the European Union has a...
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The madness of Thabo Mbeki
The SpectatorAndrew Kenny says that the South African President can't think about Aids without launching into a paranoid rant about white racism jr ews cannot spit any more because they used...
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Ancient & modern
The SpectatorSo MPs are to be accountable for their expenses! Ancient Greeks would have been appalled that it had taken so long. Accountability was at the heart of Athenian democracy during...
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Roots of terror
The SpectatorAlistair Horne says that the new jihad can be traced hack to the war that began in Algeria 50 years ago 0 n the night of All Saints, 1954, a young honeymooning couple of French...
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What next? Will Richard Desmond soon be lecturing us on declining moral standards?
The SpectatorNv hen Richard Desmond acquired the Daily Express four years ago there was an outcry. That committed Christian, Tony Blair, immediately had the pornographer turned press baron...
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The Great Presidential Stakes turns into a trillion-dollar handicap
The SpectatorT he man who got it right, in his way, was Al Gore. Quoting Al Jolson, he promised the voters: 'You ain't seen nothin' yet.' This was his message four years ago, when I was in...
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What the devil was Lees-Milne getting at when he described me as 'a nice jolly man'?
The SpectatorNv hen a volume of the Lees-Milne diaries came out, I mentioned here that, after the period which it covered, LeesMilne came to lunch with some of us at the Sunday Telegraph...
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Bush and Blair, 'terrorists'
The SpectatorFrom Harold Pinter Sir: Freedom, democracy and liberation. These terms, as enunciated by Bush and Blair, essentially mean death, destruction and chaos. Tony Blair describes the...
No deals with Labour
The SpectatorFrom Charles Kennedy MP Sir: Matthew Parris has somehow got the wrong end of the stick (Another voice, 23 October). I don't know where he got the idea that I would only...
Protecting the powerless
The SpectatorFrom Dr Michael Wilks Sir: lain Duncan Smith, in his article 'It looks like euthanasia to me' (23 October) unhelpfully confuses two issues that need to be kept separate....
Our tears and our fears
The SpectatorFrom Fran Lye Sir: I am sorry that Boris Johnson's visit to Liverpool was unsatisfactory ('What I should say sorry for', 23 October) but he does seem to be out of touch with the...
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From Matthew Heaton Sir: After all the hoo-ha surrounding that
The Spectatorleading article (16 October), I did what I assume most people did not do and actually read it. I have not agreed more completely with a piece of journalism for a long time. It...
From Charlotte Houston Sir: I have just read your leading
The Spectatorarticle on the Internet. Without exception these were exactly my feelings when I originally heard of the horrific murder of Mr Bigley. You are correct — the people of the United...
From Gregory Murphy
The SpectatorSir: Reluctant as I am to prolong the Liverpool controversy, I must correct your correspondent Elizabeth Rogers-Ross (Letters, 23 October) in her memory of the much fabled, and...
Co-op saved our post office
The SpectatorFrom Paul S. Johnson Sir: I must agree with Rod Liddle's article (Free market my eye, 23 October) where he criticised the questionable behaviour of supermarkets towards...
Stalin's passion for poetry
The SpectatorFrom Oleg Gordievsky Sir: Jane Gardam, writing about Doris Lessing's book Time Bites (Books, 23 October), says that Stalin had a passion for great writers of the USSR. As a...
Landed with Euro-rubbish
The SpectatorFrom Christopher Booker Sir: Ross Clark (Rubbish policies', 23 October) should be congratulated for producing such a wonderfully angry attack on the explosion of fly-tipping in...
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Put to bed by drunks
The SpectatorFrom Tan Heald Sir: I recognise almost everything in Charles M(x)re's memories of the Daily Telegraph 25 years ago (The Spectator's Notes, 16 October), not least the author,...
Verbal Scotch broth
The SpectatorFrom Adam Fergusson Sir: I am grateful to A.H. Ronald (Letters, 23 October) for pointing out that the dishes served in the Holyrood parliament of my novel Scone — kail brose....
Author, not editor
The SpectatorFrom Christopher Howse Sir: In his very welcome review (Books, 23 October) Sir Peregrine Worsthorne omitted to mention the title of my book, which is How We Saw It. I am its...
Speeding up destruction
The SpectatorFrom Dr Jeremy Stocker Sir: John Laughland of British Helsinki Human Rights is changing his story, as well as misquoting me (Letters, 23 October). The 'few seconds' [for Nato...
Prayerful points
The SpectatorFrom the Revd John Fellows Sir: Mr S.E.G. Hopkin (Letters, 23 October) is wrong on all counts. The Council of Constantinople did not substitute 'I believe' for 'We believe'....
Alight in the gloom
The SpectatorFrom Mike Knowles Sir: 'A single phrase often makes my day', wrote your columnist Theodore Dalrymple (Second opinion, 23 October). How true that can be! 1 was in London last...
Sanitary orders
The SpectatorFrom Nicholas Stonier Sir: Further to Theodore Dahymple's recent observations regarding the proliferation of unnecessary public notices (Second opinion, 2 October), may I offer...
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Splendours and miseries of the man on the alabaster elephant
The SpectatorI . f there is one material I particularly relish, it is alabaster. It is slightly soluble in water and therefore defenceless against a rainy climate. So it can't be used for...
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BNFL Forward into the futur
The SpectatorMike Parker looks ahead to BNFL's role in Britain's energy policy The nuclear industry in the UK has been operating successfully for nearly 60 years. Today it faces its...
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xploding the myth
The SpectatorIf Chernobyl is the worst-case scen we've got nothing to worry about It was a disaster of biblical proportions. Any European older than about 30 can probably remember where...
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Nuclear family
The SpectatorDavid Bonser says BNFL is committed to respect and responsibility Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is key to many industries, but for the nuclear industry it is...
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he real price of power
The SpectatorZac Goldsmith explain hy th should be anti-nuclear A few years ago, I joined a small group of political commentators for lunch. The guest of honour was a frail Michael Foot....
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Action stations
The SpectatorRichard Mayson says that concerns about vvaste should not prevent us building nuclear reactors Over the past few months, the wind of public opinion has seemed to be blowing in...
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The wasteland
The Spectatoroger ighfie isair1thfi is set to lead the way on decommissioning I was working in Pluto, a 1950s-generation research reactor in Harwell, Oxfordshire, when the issue of nuclear...
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adioactive Green
The SpectatorBruno Comby on the only energy source that can save us from global warming For several decades. there was a deadlock between environmental groups such as Greenpeace and the...
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All change
The SpectatorLawrie Haynes is confident that British British Nuclear Group Nuclear Group can meet its customers' needs This may be a wild claim, but I believe that I am leading the biggest...
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Leading the field
The SpectatorSue Stockton on British Nuclear Group's commitment to skills development British Nuclear Group's highly skilled workforce is its most important asset. The expertise of our...
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Providing novel solutions
The SpectatorBarry Snelson on how British Nuclear Group • British Nuclear Group intethgent.leorde.. set about decommissioning Nuclear decommissioning is under the spotlight because of the...
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It's good to talk
The SpectatorHoward Rooms on opening up discussions with the anti-nuclear brigade Some time ago, I publicly invited the antinuclear lobby to give Sel'afield a break and take a look at the...
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ower without responsibility
The SpectatorKate Hu son on Nir y nue ear energy e - ans sickness, suffering and terrorism It seems inconceivable that our government is considering building new nuclear power stations — but...
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German efficiency.
The Spectatorcomplicated nuclear history The German environmental movement had been waiting for this moment for almost 30 years. In PDOM no. 5601 of the Stade nuclear power plant, Herr...
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The lady's not for exhuming
The SpectatorPhilip Hensher OLIVIA MANNING by Neville and June Braybrooke Chatto, £20. pp. 301, ISBN 0701177497 ?) £18 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 I t's curious to reflect that in...
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Jerusalem on the Aegean
The SpectatorPhilip Manse! SALONICA: THE CITY OF GHOSTS by Mark Mazower HarperCollins, £25, pp. 525, ISBN 0007120230 ct £23 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 _F or an age of globalisation, the...
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The girl who played Ophelia
The SpectatorRichard Shone LIZZIE SIDDAL: THE TRAGEDY OF A PRE-RAPHAELITE SUPERMODEL by Lucinda Hawksley Deutsch, £17.99, pp. 230, ISBN 023300050X (t £15.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848...
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A low score in the intelligence test
The SpectatorJonathan Mirsky CHAIN OF COMMAND: THE ROAD FROM 9/11 TO ABU GHRAIB by Seymour M. Hersh Allen Lane, £17.99, pp. 394, ISBN 0713998458 £15.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 WAR...
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A statesman who reinvented himself
The SpectatorJane Ridley DISRAELI: A PERSONAL HISTORY by Christopher Hibbert HarperCollins, £25, pp. 401, ISBN 0007147171 (t) £23 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 C hristopher Hibbert is a...
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Looking through green-tinted spectacles
The SpectatorC. D. C. Armstrong THE TRANSFORMATION OF IRELAND, 1900-2000 by Diarmaid Ferriter Profile Books, £30, pp. 884, ISBN 186197071 r £26 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T here is no...
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Bad news of the world
The SpectatorOlivia Glazebrook SECONDS OF PLEASURE by Neil LaBute Faber, £10.99, pp. 223, ISBN 057122I22X T hose familiar with Neil LaBute's work will be unsurprised to read that there is...
Crises, liaisons and memories
The SpectatorWilliam Brett FASCINATION by William Boyd 1-famish Hamilton, £16.99, pp. 208, ISBN 0241142903 £14.99 (plus /2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 C hildren enjoy short stories, because they...
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Good night, sweet ladies
The SpectatorAlan Wall BEFORE I FORGET by Andre Brink Seeker, £17.99, pp. 312, ISBN 0436205378 t £15.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 A man providing us with a lengthy chronicle of his...
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Honest but not to a fault
The SpectatorJames Knox CEASELESS TURMOIL by James Lees-Milne Murray, £25, pp. 368, ISBN 0719565782 £23 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T his, the 11th volume of James LeesMilne's diaries,...
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Pastoral of an urban kind
The SpectatorFrederic Raphael THE PLO f AGAINST AMERICA by Philip Roth Cape, £16.99, pp. 391, ISBN 0224074539 't £14.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 p hilip Roth became famous, very...
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Keen but could have done better
The SpectatorJohn Martin Robinson THE ARCHITECT KING: GEORGE III AND THE CULTURE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT by David Watkin Royal Collection Publications, 430, pp.224, ISBN 1902163508 © £26 (plus...
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Driving from the back seat
The SpectatorPeter Oborne GORDON BROWN by Tom Bower Harp erCollins, 120, pp. 492, ISBN 000717540X (r3 £18 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 G ordon Brown has by and large crijoyed an...
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Continental divide
The SpectatorTom Sutcliffe on what Nicholas Snowman's career says about different styles of arts subsidy N icholas Snowman, now aged 60, is one of only three British impresarios running a...
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Sweetness and light
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth Raphael: From Urbino to Rome National Gallery, until 16 January 2005 (sponsored by Credit Suisse First Boston) p eople love to sniff the scandal of forgery....
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Intimate insight
The SpectatorMark Glazebrook The Pissarro Family at Home Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, until 2 January 2005 And did those feet in ancient times Walk upon London's suburbs green? And was a...
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Bride and prejudice
The SpectatorWilliam Packer The Price of Beauty: Edwin Long's 'Babylonian Marriage Market' Le gluon House Museum, London W14, until 16 January 2005 L eighton House, Lord Leighton's home...
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Dozy condescension
The SpectatorMark Steyn Saved! (12A, selected cinemas) S aved I follows the template of your standard high-school comedy: there's a clique of in-girls headed by a preening teen queen, and...
Page 94
Foreign exchange
The SpectatorTom Sutcliffe on this year's rewarding repertoire and future plans at Wexford rr he Musicians' Union of Ireland again picketed the opening of the Wexford Festival — which this...
Page 96
Farcical farce
The SpectatorLloyd Evans How to Act Around Cops Soho Theatre Shooting Shakespeare Hackney Empire, and touring The Battle of Green Lanes Theatre Royal, Stratford East W hat happens in a...
Crushed by the scenery
The SpectatorMichael Tanner La Forza del Destino Royal Opera T he new non-production of Verdi's La Forza del Destino at the Royal Opera is a flop of such monumental proportions that it...
Page 98
Baroque excesses
The SpectatorGiannandrea Poesio Les Paladins Compagnie Montalvo-Hetvieu, Barbican Theatre Danses Concertantes Sadler's Wells Theatre Royal Ballet Triple Bill Royal Opera House M odern and...
Page 99
Update on Three
The SpectatorRobin Holloway I Vs several years since I've attempted in these columns an overview of the state of Radio Three. Perceptions are sharpened by an actual absence from these...
Page 100
Pulling power
The SpectatorJames Delingpole E nglish constitutional monarchy is even I older than Magna Carta. According to David Starkey, it dates as far back as 1014, when Ethelred the Unready (which...
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Digital watch
The SpectatorMichael Vestey D id the BBC's creation of its Radio Four-type digital radio network BBC 7 force the commercial digital station Oneword to close? The report last week...
Just say no
The SpectatorTaki I ike everyone else, I might as well get my two-cents in while the story's still hot. About the sainted one's problems with Liverpool, that is. What a crock! I might be...
Page 102
Brief encounter
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke T ast week I was pinioned to the floor L./being subjected to all sorts of playful indignities by an imaginative and surprisingly strong young lady. Turning my...
Page 103
A good bet
The SpectatorPetronella Wyatt G overnment ministers are not the only ones to have been surprised by the adverse reaction to their proposals to relax the gambling laws. I was pretty...
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Remember the rumble
The SpectatorFRANK KEATING T hirty years ago this very day took place what some sages nominate as the greatest single happening in the whole history of sports. Which I reckon is stretching...
Q. From time to time three friends and I have
The Spectatorenjoyed an occasional game of mixed doubles. Over the past couple of years my tennis partner has seen rapid promotion in the publishing company in which she works and...
Q. Further to the letter in your column re the
The Spectator'no presents' requests, my husband and I recently celebrated our golden wedding. We too had a dread of more 'things' to be looked after. We invited 90 guests, most of whom...